Fluoridated Beverage Consumption And Dental Fluorosis: There's A Connection

Main Category: Dentistry
Also Included In: Nutrition / Diet
Article Date: 13 Mar 2006 - 23:00 PDT

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'Fluoridated Beverage Consumption And Dental Fluorosis: There's A Connection'

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Fluoride is a mineral that protects against dental cavities; however, too much fluoride during tooth formation can lead to dental fluorosis, which is usually characterized by white streaks or splotches on the teeth. Fluoride is naturally present in well water in various concentrations, is added to many public water systems to protect against cavities, and is found in beverages made with these water sources. Fluoride is readily available from toothpastes, mouthrinses, foods, and beverages, and its increased availability may be increasing children's likelihood of developing fluorosis. The amount of fluoride consumed from beverages is due to the amount of beverage consumed and the concentration of fluoride in the beverage. Today, a team of researchers from the University of Iowa, during the 35th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Dental Research, presented the results of a study in which they examined the relationship between beverage fluoride intakes and fluorosis of the permanent incisors (i.e., front teeth).

As part of the Iowa Fluoride Study, they have been following children, currently 10-13 years old, from birth. Their parents have recorded food and beverage intakes multiple times throughout the years. The researchers have analyzed well waters and purchased beverages for fluoride concentrations. When they were between 7.7 and 12 years of age, the children had dental examinations, at which the investigators looked for teeth showing evidence of fluorosis. Beverage intakes and the amounts of fluoride consumed were compared between children with and those without fluorosis in their permanent incisors.

About 35% of the children had some evidence of dental fluorosis, most of which was mild. Dietary records collected at 16 months of age showed that children with fluorosis had consumed slightly more 100% juice than had children without fluorosis. More importantly, children with fluorosis consumed more fluoride from their beverages than did children without fluorosis. At 6, 9, 12, 16, 24, and 36 months, children with fluorosis had higher fluoride intakes from all beverages than did children without fluorosis. At multiple ages, children with fluorosis had higher fluoride intakes from infant formulas and 100% juice than did children without fluorosis. Our results suggest that fluoride intake from beverages during infancy and early childhood can increase the risk of the child's developing fluorosis in permanent incisors. High fluoride intake from beverages could be due to either drinking too much of a beverage prepared with accepted fluoride concentrations, or normal intake of beverages prepared with water having naturally high fluoride concentrations. The association between fluoride ingested from beverages and dental fluorosis should be carefully balanced with fluoride's benefits in preventing caries.

Another research team from the University of Iowa, recognizing that sugared beverages are playing a larger role in the diet of the American population, assessed erosion of enamel and root surfaces following exposure to select sugared beverages, including Coke®, Diet Coke®, Gatorade®, Red Bull®, and apple juice. Extracted teeth were painted with fingernail polish, leaving a small window of either enamel or root surface exposed to the environment. These teeth were soaked in one of the beverages for 25 hours, sectioned into thin slices, and viewed though a microscope. The amount of erosion was measured and compared among beverages for both enamel and root surfaces.

Gatorade® caused the most enamel erosion, followed by Red Bull® and Coke®, with Diet Coke® and apple juice exhibiting the least erosion. Gatorade® was also shown to have caused the most erosion on the root surface, followed by Red Bull®, Coke®, apple juice, and Diet Coke®. Erosion depths were greater in root surfaces compared with enamel following exposure to Red Bull®, Coke®, and apple juice. Erosion depths were greater in enamel than root surfaces with Gatorade®. Enamel and root surface erosion depths did not differ in Diet Coke®. It was concluded that exposure of teeth to sugared beverages caused significant erosion of both the enamel and root surfaces, but it was not consistent between beverages, with some specific beverages causing more erosion than others.

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This is a summary of abstract #473, "Beverage Fluoride Intakes and Dental Fluorosis of the Permanent Incisors", by T.A. Marshall, B. Broffitt, J.M. Eichenberger-Gilmore, J.J. Warren, and S.M. Levy (University of Iowa, Iowa City, USA), and abstract #474, "Enamel and Root Surface Erosion Due to Popular US Beverages", by L. Ehlen, T.A. Marshall, F. Qian, J.J. Warren, J.S. Wefel, M. Hogan, and J.D. Harless (University of Iowa, Iowa City, USA), to be presented at a poster session beginning at 2 p.m. on Thursday, March 9, 2006, in the Pacific Hall of the Walt Disney World Dolphin Hotel, during the 35th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Dental Research.

Interested readers should also see an article in the March, 2006, issue of the Journal of Dental Research, "Carbonated Soft Drinks and Dental Caries in the Primary Dentition", by W. Sohn et al. (J Dent Res 85[3]:262-266, 2006; http://www.dentalresearch.org/).

Contact: Linda Hemphill
lhemphill@iadr.org
International & American Association for Dental Research

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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Linda Hemphill. "Fluoridated Beverage Consumption And Dental Fluorosis: There's A Connection." Medical News Today. MediLexicon, Intl., 13 Mar. 2006. Web.
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Visitor Opinions (latest shown first)

Fluoride not reducing cavities, either

posted by nyscof on 13 Mar 2006 at 11:52 pm

The same research team, working on the same Iowa Fluoride Study, found that children living in fluoridated communities have more fluorosis but no less tooth decay than children living in suboptimally fluoridated areas. However, that study didn't come with a news release. So we suspect no media will report it. So we will

New Studies: Fluoride Not Preventing Tooth Decay

New York – March 9 -- Fluoride is not stopping cavities and is causing discolored teeth, is reported in several new studies to be presented at the American Association for Dental Research’s annual meeting from March 8 – 11, 2006, in Orlando, Florida, reports the New York State Coalition Opposed to Fluoridation (NYSCOF).

For example:

-- Researchers following children from birth, starting in 1991- 1995 (Iowa Fluoride Study), found almost double the dental fluorosis in early erupting permanent teeth of 9 year-olds drinking optimally fluoridated water compared to children drinking sub-optimally fluoridated water (41% vs. 21%); but no less tooth decay.(1)

-- Researchers found no significant relationship between fluoride exposure and cavities in permanent teeth of 6 to 9-year-olds in Campeche, Mexico(2). Previously, it was reported that 56% of this group has dental fluorosis.(3)

-- A U.S. national study reports cavity prevalence increased by 15% in 2 to 5-year-olds, in surveys taken between 1988-1994 and 1999-2002,(4) despite 60 years of water fluoridation reaching 2/3 of Americans on public water supplies and virtually 100% via the food supply. However, the Centers for Disease Control report that 1/3 to 1/2 of U.S. schoolchildren display dental fluorosis.(4a)

-- Another U.S. study shows that breastfed children have less cavities than non-breastfed.(5) even though breast milk has 100 times less fluoride than dentists claim is optimal to reduce cavities. Breastfeeding is also protective against fluorosis.(5a)

-- Although New York City fluoridated in 1965, NYC children of Chinese descent suffer a much higher prevalence and severity of tooth decay than the national average (63% vs 38%). (6)

-- About half of 7 to14-year-old children from fluoridated Rochester, NY, have cavities. Latino children had significantly higher caries experience than African-American and Caucasian children, thus indicating that disparities exist among different ethnic groups even when the water is fluoridated.(7)

-- In fluoridated Detroit, 91% of African American low-income children, 5 years and younger, have tooth decay.(8)

“Today, fluoridation puts American children at risk of dental fluorosis without any benefit of less tooth decay," says Paul Beeber, NYSCOF President and General Counsel. "And growing evidence links fluoride to hypersensitivities, bone damage, thyroid problems and more," says Beeber.

These studies add to a growing body of evidence pointing to fluoride's ineffectiveness and lack of safety: See: http://www.fluoridealert.org/health/teeth/caries/fluoridation.html#top

Contact: Paul Beeber, nyscof@aol.com

http://www.orgsites.com/ny/nyscof

http://www.FluorideAction.Net

SOURCE: NYS Coalition Opposed to Fluoridation, Inc

PO Box 263

Old Bethpage, NY 11804

References with live links:
tinyurl.com/6kqtu

(1) AADR 35th Annual Meeting in Orlando:
Abstract # 0153 - Dental caries and fluorosis in relation to water fluoride levels, I Hong, SM Levy, J Warren, B Broffitt

(2) AADR 35th Annual Meeting in Orlando:

Abstract # 1995 - Cross-Sectional analysis of dental caries in children with mixed dentition, AA Vallejos-Sanchez, CE Mendina-Solis, JF Casanova-Rosado, G Maupome, AJ Casanova-Rosado, M Minaya-Sanchez

(3) Prevalence of dental fluorosis and additional sources of exposure to fluoride as risk factors to dental fluorosis in schoolchildren of Campeche, Mexico, PR Beltran-Valladares, H Cocom-Tun, JF Casanova-Rosado, AA Vallejos-Sanchez, CE Medina-Solis, G Maupome, Rev Invest Clin. 2005 Uly-Aug;57(4):532-9

(4) AADR 35th Annual Meeting in Orlando:

Abstract # 0458 - Trends in Dental Caries of Primary Teeth, United States, 1988-2002, F Jaramillo, E Beltran, L Barker, S Griffin, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

(4a) Beltrán-Aguilar et al. Surveillance for Dental Caries, Dental Sealants, Tooth Retention, Edentulism and Enamel Fluorosis – United States, 1988-1994 and 1999-2002. MMWR. CDC August 26, 2005

(5) AADR 35th Annual Meeting in Orlando:

Abstract # 0881 - No association between breastfeeding and early childhood caries: NHANES 1999-2002, H Iida, P Auinger, M Weitzman, RJ Billings

(5a) Breastfeeding is Protective Against Dental Fluorosis in a Nonfluoridated Rural Area of Ontario, Canada, D Brothwell, H Limeback, Journal of Human Lactation, Vol. 19, No. 4, 386-390 (2003)

(6) AADR 35th Annual Meeting in Orlando:

Abstract # 0l50 - Caries Experience among Chinese-American Children and Adolescents in Lower Manhattan, CH Chinn

(7) AADR 35th Annual Meeting in Orlando:

Abstract # 0478 - Dental Caries in Latino Elementary School Children, S Gajendra

(8) AADR 35th Annual Meeting in Orlando:

Abstract # 1992 - Severity of Dental Caries Among African American Children in Detroit, AI Ismail, M Tellez

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